Chapter 1. Introduction: Art and Other Practicalities
Chapter 2. The Problem of Art in Archaeology
Chapter 3. Artists
Chapter 4. Audiences
Chapter 5. Images
Chapter 6. Aesthetics
Chapter 7. The Future of Art in Archaeology
Marit K. Munson is associate professor in the Department of Anthropology at Trent University and director of the Trent University Archaeological Research Centre, Peterborough, Ontario, Canada.
Anthropological archaeologists have long faced a contradiction: We
appreciate the beauty of the objects we study, but, lacking
insights into aesthetics and art, we dryly reduce those objects to
artifacts and data. In this new book, Marit Munson provides us with
an enlightening new perspective for understanding art - the
artists, the audiences, the images, and the aesthetics - in the
archaeology of the ancient Southwest. For readers interested in art
in general, the book showcases insights gained from the
Southwestern past. And for those specially interested in the
Southwest, Munson opens eyes and minds to new ways of seeing.
*Michelle Hegmon, Arizona State University*
Many people value southwestern archaeology for its art, for the
beauty of its ancient pottery, enigmatic rock art and finely-made
shell and stone jewelry. Archaeologists find this attraction
uncomfortable, because we are trained to emphasize general patterns
in material remains rather than unique achievements, and we know
that we will never understand the meanings these objects - however
magnificent - had for the people who made and used them. In this
thoughtful and concise treatment, Marit Munson argues persuasively
that archaeologists have much to learn by expanding their vision to
include the art behind the artifacts considering the artists, their
audiences, the imagery, and even their aesthetics, because in doing
so we develop new tools to better understand the past.
*Linda S. Cordell, senior scholar, School for Advanced Research,
Santa Fe; professor emerita, University of Colorado, Boulder*
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